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Williamsburg, May 31, 1774
Gentlemen, Last Sunday morning several letters were received from Boston, Philadelphia, and Maryland, on the most interesting and important subject of American grievances. The inhabitants of Boston seem to be in a most piteous and melancholy situation, and are doubtful whether they will be able to sustain the impending blow without the assistance and cooperation of the other colonies -
At a very full meeting of delegates from the different counties in the colony and dominion of Virginia
begun in Williamsburg the first day of August, in the year of our Lord 1774, and continued by several adjournments to Saturday the 6th of the same month, the following association was unanimously resolved upon and agreed to -
Philadelphia, September 1st, 1774
[Five lines from Euripides] -
The 9th article of the association of the late Continental Congress
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Committee chamber, December 6, 1774
The committee, taking into consideration the tenth article of the Association of the General Congress, do unanimously resolve, that the said article requires the opening of all packages of goods imported after the first day of December, and before the first of February -
To the public
The ship Lady Gage being arrived from London, with a considerable cargo of goods, many of which, it is probable, were ordered (after the whole continent had declared for a non-importation) with a view of taking advantage of the public -
To the public
The sense of the city relative to the landing the India Company's tea ... it is the desire of a number of the citizens, that at his departure from hence, he should see ... their detestation of the measures pursued by the ministry and the India Company -
To the public
The long expected tea ship arrived last night at Sandy-Hook, but the pilot would not bring up the captain till the sense of the city was known -
We the subscribers, inhabitants of the town of [blank] having taken into our serious consideration, the precarious state of the liberties of North-America, and more especially the present distressed condition of our sister colony of the Massachusetts-Bay
That from henceforth we will suspend all commercial intercourse with the said island of Great-Britain, until the Parliament shall cease to enact laws imposing taxes upon the colonies, without their consent, or until the pretended right of taxing is dropped